iPad

The Blackberry Playbook is now the first tablet to gain FIPS certification, which means that it meets US government standards for data security and encryption.  Playbook also won Best in Show and Best of FOSE in handheld devices at the federal government IT conference in Washington DC this past week.

This certification and these awards certainly reinforce RIM’s position that the Playbook is the first “professional grade” tablet on the market, and may be a good indicator of how the market will evolve – Android and iPad devices for consumers, and Playbook for professionals.   Now, what will Avaya and Cisco do?  Both companies have announced  business focused tablets as well, but built on Android.

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Living with Playbook, two months later

by alec on June 15, 2011

When RIM launched the BlackBerry Playbook in mid-April, I grabbed one and started using it.  You might have noticed that I didn’t write about it the time.  The same as other writers, my initial take on the Playbook was that it had a lot of promise but wasn’t ready for prime-time.  Some websites didn’t work, there weren’t many apps, and the device itself was a little buggy. I wanted to like it though, and set about figuring out whether I could put my iPad aside, and use the Playbook instead.

Two months, and three software updates later, Playbook has dramatically improved.

  1. Battery life, which was typically less than a day when Playbook first launched, is now much improved.
  2. Applications are coming at a steady pace, and several key applications that I depend on my iPad, are now available.
  3. The biggest breakthrough was a native Dropbox client named Bluebox.   Now I can access all of my files from Playbook.
  4. All of the major newspapers I read on iPad, now have equivalent editions on Playbook.   Interestingly, they’ve all chosen to omit the social sharing buttons that are present on iPad.  That throws a wrench into my early morning routine – reading the paper on my tablet, and tweeting interesting stories.  No equivalent yet exists for FlipBoard on the iPad, but several capable news aggregators (like News360) and RSS readers are available.
  5. One of the biggest criticisms of Playbook, when it launched, was the lack of a native email client.  If you didn’t have a Blackberry to use their Blackberry Bridge application with, then you were out of luck.  The same is still true.  However, for Blackberry users, the Bridge application provides capable access to email, contacts, calendar, and messenger.  The email and contacts experience is very similar to that on iPad, and using Blackberry Messenger on Playbook is light years better than the native experience on a Blackberry device.

The QNX operating system, which is the foundation of Playbook, will also becoming to the Blackberry handset.   It will be a profound shift, and it can’t happen soon enough.  Playbook is already a better device than the BlackBerry that is its companion, and it’s only going to get better.

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Bria iPad Edition 1.0 a winner!

June 8, 2011
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I hadn’t really looked at CounterPath’s softphone offerings in some time, so when the Bria team asked me to take a peek at their latest offering, Bria iPad Edition 1.0, I jumped at the chance.  And boy, was I glad I did! Bria iPad Edition releases today.  It’s free $14.99, and it brings standards based [...]

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The Post-PC Era is an old idea

May 18, 2011
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They say that fashion goes in cycles.  Don’t get rid of your old clothes — just hang them in your closet and ten or twenty years later you’ll be able to put them on again (assuming they still fit!), and be fashionable once more. Steve Job’s pronouncements on the Post PC era have generated one [...]

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Bill C-32 enshrines planned obsolescence

December 6, 2010
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In my basement, there are three milk crates of vinyl records – the music I collected in my teens.  Those records haven’t been played in a very long time.  They became obsolete in October 1982 with the introduction of the audio CD.  CD’s were convenient, easy, and mostly scratch proof.  We all loved them, and [...]

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I’m an iPad fan. It’s true.

July 25, 2010
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I’m sitting in the passenger seat of the family van at the moment, typing on the onscreen keyboard on my iPad (yes, my iPad). We’re cruising back from a house hunting trip for son Jon, who is starting his second year at McMaster University in Hamilton, about 5 hours from home. The significance of this [...]

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I won’t be buying an iPad after all.

April 20, 2010

For the last couple of days, I’ve been in the company of masses of the technorati here at eComm.  Many of them are carrying Apple’s latest gadget – the iPad.  I won’t lie.  iPad is very pretty.  It has definitely caught my eye, and because of delays in delivering the iPad to Canada, I came [...]

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iPad “soars” on Boingo

April 7, 2010

There’s nothing like a good hack hook to grab media attention.  The latest news from Boingo Wireless does exactly that.  Reading iPad Now Second Most Popular Mobile WiFi Device in Boingo Airports, Apple’s Latest Market Changer Surpasses Android, Blackberry, Windows Mobile, the implication is that the four day old iPad is on such a tear that [...]

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Why wait for the iPad, Mr. Murdoch?

March 12, 2010

Rupert Murdoch is no dummy.  He says he loves cable TV, because people pay for it.  He also says hates Google because he doesn’t think he gets a fair share of the revenue that it generates in exchange for the content that his media businesses create.  And now he’s talking up the iPad, saying: “Now [...]

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